Top News
Fewer than half of Albertans say they would stay in a newly independent province: poll

Fewer than half of Albertans say they would stay in a newly independent province: poll

The Postmedia-Leger survey also found that Canadians think Alberta’s separation would have a greater economic impact than Quebec's. Fewer than half of Albertans are certain that they would continue living in their newly independent province should it separate from Canada, according to a new Postmedia-Leger poll, as a referendum later this year is set to decide if the province wants...

Champagne stands his ground after budget watchdog questions fiscal anchor

Champagne stands his ground after budget watchdog questions fiscal anchor

The federal finance minister is standing by his government's projections after Ottawa's budgetary watchdog cast doubt on Ottawa's ability to hit a key fiscal anchor. Parliamentary Budget Officer Annette Ryan on Thursday released her office's first economic and fiscal update since she assumed the role in April. Ryan predicts annual deficits will average $4.6 billion higher than Ottawa projected in...

PM Carney government’s AI strategy pledges thousands of jobs, lacks safety details

PM Carney government’s AI strategy pledges thousands of jobs, lacks safety details

After months of delay, the federal government is unveiling its AI strategy that outlines a vision focused on job creation, sovereignty and increased AI adoption. But the plan lacks details on how Canadians will be protected from the technology’s potentially adverse effects. Prime Minister Mark Carney is making the announcement alongside Artificial Intelligence Minister Evan Solomon in Toronto on Thursday...

‘President Trump’s back on his high horse’: Doug Ford responds to latest 51st state comments

‘President Trump’s back on his high horse’: Doug Ford responds to latest 51st state comments

Ontario Premier Doug Ford is once again pushing back against U.S. President Donald Trump’s “51st state” rhetoric, suggesting Canada’s sovereignty is not for sale and that the province is outperforming its American counterparts in job creation. “President Trump’s back on his high horse, saying we’re going to be a 51st state. I can tell President Trump that will never, ever...

Conservative senators furious over failure to deliver 200,000 postcards protesting anti-hate bill

Conservative senators furious over failure to deliver 200,000 postcards protesting anti-hate bill

When Conservative MPs opposed to the federal government’s anti-hate bill in the Commons, they brandished Bibles to accentuate their argument that the proposed law could stymie religious freedom. Now, as Bill-C9 nears the end of its parliamentary journey in the Senate, Conservatives are raising the alarm that hundreds of thousands of postcards protesting the bill, have not been delivered by...

Polls

Section Sponsor

This section is sponsored by Canada's mining companies.
Canadians Weigh the Potential Impact of Alberta and Quebec Independence

Canadians Weigh the Potential Impact of Alberta and Quebec Independence

Talk of provincial independence has resurfaced in different parts of the country, raising questions about national unity, economic impact, and how Canadians would respond if Alberta or Quebec were to leave Confederation. Leger’s latest survey explores how closely Canadians are following these discussions, which province they believe would have the greater impact on Canada if it became independent, and whether...

Federal Politics: Liberals Reach Highest Level of Support

Federal Politics: Liberals Reach Highest Level of Support

Leger’s latest federal polling shows the Liberal Party continuing to strengthen its position nationally, reaching 50% support among decided voters. This represents a two-point increase since April and marks the highest level of support recorded by Leger for the Liberals since they first formed government in 2015.



Opinion

More
Alberta separatists are not ‘deplorables,' says province's former finance minister

Alberta separatists are not ‘deplorables,' says province's former finance minister

Jim Dinning tells the Post’s John Ivison why he is sympathetic to Premier Danielle Smith’s push to give separatists the chance to express their strongly held sentiments in a referendum

A prime minister’s top two responsibilities are a weakness for Poilievre

A prime minister’s top two responsibilities are a weakness for Poilievre

Former Prime Minister Brian Mulroney had a concise way of describing the job’s main responsibility. Of all the files that land on a prime minister’s desk, he liked to say, two can never be delegated to anyone else: national unity, and the relationship with the United States.

News

More
B.C. MLA Jordan Kealy charged with sexual assault in Fort St. John

B.C. MLA Jordan Kealy charged with sexual assault in Fort St. John

The B.C. Prosecution Service says Independent MLA Jordan Kealy, who represents Peace River North, has been charged with one count of sexual assault in Fort St. John. The service says the alleged offences occurred between Jan. 1 and Sept. 20, 2024. Court documents indicate the alleged offences took place in Cecil Lake, a rural area where Kealy farms north of...

Carney has not formed opinion on Ford's island airport expansion vision in Toronto

Carney has not formed opinion on Ford's island airport expansion vision in Toronto

TORONTO -- Prime Minister Mark Carney says he has not formed an opinion on Ontario Premier Doug Ford's plan to expand Toronto's island airport.

Politician's Pen

More
Regulatory Predictability, Not Government Favouritism, Will Get Major Projects Built

Regulatory Predictability, Not Government Favouritism, Will Get Major Projects Built

Government House Leader Steven MacKinnon’s recent acknowledgment that new legislation may be needed to accelerate approvals for major projects is an admission of long-standing failure. Canada’s regulatory system for infrastructure and resource development has become slow, uncertain, and politicized. While Ottawa now speaks of one or two year approval windows and continues expanding entities like the Major Projects Office, deeper...

To be or not to be (partisan)?  that is the question facing the Prime Minister on the Senate


Opinion (Continued) More

Is a technical recession technically a problem for Mark Carney?

Is a technical recession technically a problem for Mark Carney?

The political significance of 2 consecutive quarters of bad GDP data. Pierre Poilievre popped up before reporters who were waiting outside a cabinet meeting on Tuesday and in the span of 10 minutes the Conservative leader managed to use the word "recession" more than two dozen times. "Mr. Trump's policies are affecting all G7 countries, and none of them are...

Canadians should hit back at renewed 51st state insults

Canadians should hit back at renewed 51st state insults

We recall last year when U.S. Ambassador Pete Hoekstra said that annexation talk was over. “From my standpoint, from the President’s standpoint, 51st state’s not coming back,” he said. “It’s done.” Yeah, sure. This week Donald Trump posted “51st State” on Truth Social. It came with a link to an article about the Canadian economy dipping into a recession, the...

Arctic Sovereignty and Potential: Ignore the Community, Lose the Opportunity
Donald Trump has found another way to keep Canadians up at night

Donald Trump has found another way to keep Canadians up at night

Dominic LeBlanc, Mark Carney’s point minister on Canada-U.S. relations, was no doubt feeling the pressure as he landed in Washington on Tuesday to kick-start trade talks with Donald Trump’s administration. But it’s less pressure than he was facing last year, according to some new polling from Abacus Data. Canadians’ anxiety about Trump’s trade war has declined sharply from 2025, Abacus...

The Carney paradox — as Canada swirls down the drain, his popularity goes through the roof

The Carney paradox — as Canada swirls down the drain, his popularity goes through the roof

Are Canadians worried? Apparently not. So what's wrong with us? Has 'elbows up' gone to our heads?

The crucial words Carney left out of his antisemitism speech

The crucial words Carney left out of his antisemitism speech

In the course of researching my biography on Irwin Cotler, I spoke with his old McGill debating partner, Moses Znaimer, the CityTV and MuchMusic founder. In typically unfiltered Znaimer fashion he wondered aloud what the former Liberal party justice minister thought about his old party, “which betrayed the Jewish community, in favour of the huge Muslim influx, of which they...



Plus ça Change? Reflections on the Alberta Referendum from a Veteran of 1995

Plus ça Change? Reflections on the Alberta Referendum from a Veteran of 1995

Watching Canada slide toward another episode of national unity trauma has been profoundly saddening for those of us who lived through the country’s last, near-death encounter with a secession crisis. In 1995, I was serving as assistant secretary of constitutional affairs in the Privy Council Office, responsible for generating policy arguments and messaging for the federalist coalition. The last stage...

Alberta separatist leaders imagine a grand alliance with Quebec separatists. Not happening.

Alberta separatist leaders imagine a grand alliance with Quebec separatists. Not happening.

There’s a fantasy among some Alberta separatists that Quebec separatists are their friends. Not likely. They are risky company for an Alberta politician of any stripe. As Premier Danielle Smith visits Quebec for friendly talks with the new premier, Christine Frechette, she knows who to avoid. It’s much noted in Quebec that the separatist Parti Quebecois could win a provincial...

Danielle Smith set to name experts to nail down cost of Alberta separatism

Danielle Smith set to name experts to nail down cost of Alberta separatism

To start the week, in this column space, you would have read how Alberta Premier Danielle Smith gave us a ballpark price tag for Alberta leaving Canada and becoming its own country. It was a ballpark number. Around $400 billion in start-up costs for an independent Alberta. $25 billion to $50 billion in yearly costs.

Ontario’s electricity bills are set to shoot up. But Mark Carney has a big idea that might keep them in check

Ontario’s electricity bills are set to shoot up. But Mark Carney has a big idea that might keep them in check

Ontarians could soon be facing a massive energy bill. Electricity demand between now and 2050 will likely double, according to projections, and to meet it Doug Ford’s government intends to spend hundreds of billions of dollars on new nuclear reactors alone. Throw in anticipated refurbishments of existing reactors, plus new transmission lines and other power generation projects, and the costs...

Will the B.C. Conservatives now become MAGA North?

Will the B.C. Conservatives now become MAGA North?

Someone tuning in to the victory address by new B.C. Conservative leader Kerry-Lynne Findlay could have been forgiven if they thought they’d somehow stumbled across a speech being given by a U.S. Republican from Texas. “In our national anthem, we cry out to God to make our land glorious and free,” Ms. Findlay told the gathering of Conservative party faithful...

Danielle Smith drops a $400-billion bomb on Alberta separatism

Danielle Smith drops a $400-billion bomb on Alberta separatism

Alberta Premier Danielle Smith drops a political bomb, a financial bomb, a bomb dropped on the separatist assumptions of way more gain than pain by Alberta leaving Canada and striking out on its own. Almost $400 billion in start-up costs to set up an independent Alberta. Roughly $80,000 for every Albertan. Somewhere between $25 billion and $50 billion in yearly...



It is up to Albertans to shut the separatist movement down

It is up to Albertans to shut the separatist movement down

Ever since Alberta Premier Danielle Smith announced the referendum on a referendum there has been a flurry of speculation from one end of the country to the other. Most of it comes in the form of a warning: things could look much more dire if this confusing referendum question propulses Albertans into a real referendum on separation. Separatists don’t give...

Mark Carney in denial over what's behind antisemitism

Mark Carney in denial over what's behind antisemitism

Mark Carney is usually good at speaking truth to power, but yesterday he failed. In an address to Jewish Canadians at Holy Blossom Temple in Toronto, he named the problem — rampant antisemitism — but failed to offer a solution. He failed to send a message to those causing the problem. And he failed to understand the nature of Canada itself.

With Guilbeault gone, the Justin Trudeau era is now officially over

With Guilbeault gone, the Justin Trudeau era is now officially over

Steven Guilbeault finally had enough. The renewed deal between Alberta and Ottawa, which lowers the headline industrial carbon price and weakens or eliminates other climate policies he fought for as the minister of environment and climate change, made it abundantly clear that he could no longer sit in the Liberal caucus. Indeed, the writing was so obviously on the political...

Mark Carney had a blithe response to the departure of a star Liberal. Here’s why he may regret it

Mark Carney had a blithe response to the departure of a star Liberal. Here’s why he may regret it

When reporters asked Mark Carney about Steven Guilbeault’s decision to quit the Liberal caucus and his seat, months after walking out of cabinet over the Alberta MOU, the Prime Minister was gracious. He wished him and his family well. As reported by Radio-Canada, Carney said: “C’est sa décision, c’est normal, c’est la vie” — it’s his decision, it’s normal, that’s...

Liberals can do better than abandon promised free trade in Canadian booze

Liberals can do better than abandon promised free trade in Canadian booze

The first promise made by the federal Liberals in their last election platform — literally — was to unite the country by building one economy, so that Canadians can work wherever they want and goods can move freely from coast to coast. “Unleashing free trade” would “give ourselves much more than any foreign government, including the U.S., can ever take...

Central Canadian elites are as much to blame for Alberta’s separatist movement as anyone else

Central Canadian elites are as much to blame for Alberta’s separatist movement as anyone else

Central Canadian political elites are upset with Alberta Premier Danielle Smith’s decision to hold a referendum that might eventually lead to a sovereign Alberta. While sovereigntist sentiment in Quebec has long been acknowledged and accommodated in English Canada, Western alienation is treated with who-do-they-think-they-are condescension.



Jean Augustine Honoured with Pearson Centre Laureate Award for a Lifetime of Leadership and Firsts
If there’s a Trump 2.0, Canada must be ready to face that brave new world

If there’s a Trump 2.0, Canada must be ready to face that brave new world

If this president has somehow permanently changed American politics, if there is a Trump 2.0 with someone like J.D. Vance, Canada must embrace the wider world, as Mark Carney is doing. It's not only prudent, it is essential.

For new B.C. Conservative leader Kerry-Lynne Findlay, it's about 'faith, family and freedom'

For new B.C. Conservative leader Kerry-Lynne Findlay, it's about 'faith, family and freedom'

Former federal cabinet minister Kerry-Lynne Findlay cast herself as the one, true blue Conservative in the campaign for the B.C. party leadership that culminated Saturday evening with her narrow, fourth ballot victory. Article content “B.C. Liberal insiders are trying to take over the Conservative party of B.C.,” declared Findlay’s campaign literature. “They want to steal the Conservative name and push...

Mark Carney flexes the Liberal party’s powers of transformation

Mark Carney flexes the Liberal party’s powers of transformation

Steven Guilbeault’s breakup with his Liberal government was a long time coming, but the events that set if off were swift. In an interview with my colleague Ryan Tumilty, the former environment minister and soon-to-be ex-MP underlined just how much the Liberals have changed in a matter of months.

Pierre Poilievre has a choice to make

Pierre Poilievre has a choice to make

Alberta Premier Danielle Smith’s separation referendum is federal Conservative leader Pierre Poilievre’s opportunity. If he takes it. Alberta is ground zero for the conservative movement in Canada. It has long asserted a more populist, free market, small government hold on the Conservative Party of Canada, past and present. It has outsized political influence on the direction of the party, given...

Steven Guilbeault’s resignation from the Liberal caucus and putting water in your climate policy wine

Steven Guilbeault’s resignation from the Liberal caucus and putting water in your climate policy wine

One word kept coming up this week, as Steven Guilbeault tendered his resignation from a government in which he no longer thought he could do his most important work. The word was “room.” As in: Is there still room on the Liberal benches for an ardent environmentalist? Can the party offer room for pipeline and resource proponents, alongside people animated...

News (Continued) More

Federal government announces mining workforce alliance to build 'talent pipelines'

Federal government announces mining workforce alliance to build 'talent pipelines'

The federal government has announced a new industry-led alliance aimed at growing the skilled workforce for Canada's mining industry. Jobs and Families Minister Patty Hajdu made the announcement today in southwestern Nova Scotia, saying the new alliance is part of the prime minister's drive to build a more independent economy. The government's mining and minerals workforce alliance is the first...

Budget watchdog forecasts deeper deficits than Ottawa projected in spring update

Budget watchdog forecasts deeper deficits than Ottawa projected in spring update

The federal government's budget watchdog says Ottawa has less than a one per cent chance of maintaining the key fiscal anchor of shrinking the deficit as a share of the economy every year. Parliamentary Budget Officer Annette Ryan today released her office's first economic and fiscal update since she assumed the role in April.

David Coon resigning as N.B. Green Party leader, but will remain in the legislature

David Coon resigning as N.B. Green Party leader, but will remain in the legislature

New Brunswick Green Party Leader David Coon says he plans to step down after 14 years in the role. Coon says he plans to remain the MLA for Fredericton Lincoln. He said he's resigning as leader to give the party time to choose a successor before the next election.

He yells’: Mark Carney’s focus has Liberal MPs bristling

He yells’: Mark Carney’s focus has Liberal MPs bristling

Perhaps, we’ll soon call it Mark Carney’s democratic deficit. The prime minister has a penchant for centralizing power — one explored a few times in this column — and now the edict to his Liberal MPs is that he does not want to be challenged. Over the course of several caucus meetings now, Grit MPs report Carney lashing out at...

Higher oil and gas prices coming soon, industry and analysts warn

Higher oil and gas prices coming soon, industry and analysts warn

Energy executives and analysts are warning that oil and gas prices will likely rise significantly as reserves deplete and the Strait of Hormuz remains closed. The price of Brent crude futures was $98.20 US a barrel midday Wednesday. But experts say it could balloon to $150 US or more in the coming weeks, largely due to fading hopes for a...

Will the Alberta-Canada carbon pricing deal work? A new analysis is skeptical

Will the Alberta-Canada carbon pricing deal work? A new analysis is skeptical

A new analysis shows the Carney government's pipeline deal could lead Canada further from its climate targets, even with an agreement on carbon pricing. The independent Canadian Climate Institute modelled the impact of the new deal between Alberta and Ottawa on carbon pollution. Compared with the emissions trajectory before the deal was signed, the institute's analysis found Canada's emissions would...

Things to know about Donald Trump's forced labour claims against Canada

Things to know about Donald Trump's forced labour claims against Canada

Canada is facing the prospect of entirely new tariffs from U.S. President Donald Trump's administration after Washington claimed Ottawa has a poor track record on preventing importation of products of forced labour. The move comes as Canada's biggest free trade pact, the Canada-United States-Mexico Agreement, is up for renewal.

How high pandemic-period immigration papered over the cracks in Canada's economy

How high pandemic-period immigration papered over the cracks in Canada's economy

Prime Minister Mark Carney has said that lower immigration under his government helps to explain why Canada's economy has declined for the last two quarters, pushing it into recession territory. While Carney has not said the word "recession" himself when asked about the decline -- and while economists citing broader economic indicators argue Canada is not in a true recession...

New federal AI strategy looks to close 'adoption gap,' build public trust

New federal AI strategy looks to close 'adoption gap,' build public trust

Ottawa's new national artificial intelligence strategy says Canada has a major AI adoption gap and looks to build trust through legislation that tackles concerns about surveillance pricing and chatbot safety. The strategy being announced by Prime Minister Mark Carney in Toronto today plans to increase use of AI through free training for all Canadians.

Documents reveal that Palantir contract was worth $30M more than government disclosed

Documents reveal that Palantir contract was worth $30M more than government disclosed

The Department of National Defence kept secret how much it paid for a contract with the controversial American tech company Palantir, according to newly released documents that show the deal was worth $30 million more than the government disclosed to Parliament last year. It’s the latest in an expanding picture of how the Canadian military uses and pays the U.S...

Canada, Five Eyes warn China using online job sites in spy operation

Canada, Five Eyes warn China using online job sites in spy operation

In a rare joint warning, Canada and other Five Eyes intelligence sharing countries say China is using professional networking sites like LinkedIn, Indeed and Upwork to target current and former government or military personnel who could have access to “classified or privileged information.” The alert was drafted by the Canadian Security Intelligence Service (CSIS), the Australia Security Intelligence Organization, the...

Canada looking to beef up forced labour laws as U.S. imposes new 10 per cent tariff

Canada looking to beef up forced labour laws as U.S. imposes new 10 per cent tariff

Prime Minister Mark Carney said Wednesday his Liberal government will soon introduce legislation on forced labour in supply chains after the Trump administration proposed a 10 per cent additional tariff on Canada and other countries following an investigation into the issue. "Canada has a very strong legislative regime against forced labour in supply chains," Carney told reporters in Ottawa. "We...

Canadian economy ‘expected to strengthen’ after technical recession: OECD

Canadian economy ‘expected to strengthen’ after technical recession: OECD

After Canada’s economy slipped into a technical recession last week, a new outlook by the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development, or OECD, said on Wednesday said that GDP growth is set to rebound later in the year and continue growing into 2027. “GDP growth is expected to strengthen over 2026 and 2027,” the OECD said in a note about...

New B.C. Conservative leader would maintain 'economic relations' with an independent Alberta

New B.C. Conservative leader would maintain 'economic relations' with an independent Alberta

Findlay said she understood the 'frustration behind things like the (Alberta) referendum.' Newly elected B.C. Conservative Leader Kerry-Lynne Findlay says she’d maintain commercial ties with neighbouring Alberta if Albertans vote to leave Canada. “I would maintain relations, economic relations,” Findlay told National Post when asked how she’d react to a successful Alberta independence vote as premier of B.C. One of...

Canada must increase NATO air and naval defences, U.S. demands

Canada must increase NATO air and naval defences, U.S. demands

The U.S. expects European NATO allies and Canada to swiftly increase the number of manned and unmanned aircraft and ships they contribute to the alliance’s defence plans as Washington steps back in these areas, a top U.S. general said on Wednesday. The statement by U.S. Air Force General Alexus Grynkewich, NATO’s top commander and the head of U.S. forces in...

Car­ney's Lib­er­als hit record-high 50% sup­port: poll - A first for a gov­ern­ing party in 23 years

Car­ney's Lib­er­als hit record-high 50% sup­port: poll - A first for a gov­ern­ing party in 23 years

The Car­ney Lib­er­als now have the sup­port of half of Cana­dians, accord­ing to a new Post­me­dia-leger poll, the first time any gov­ern­ing party has hit that bench­mark in pop­u­lar sup­port in more than two dec­ades. The poll, con­duc­ted over the past week, found 50 per cent of decided voters said they would most likely sup­port the Lib­er­als “if fed­eral elec­tions...

Ottawa tells CRTC to change course on increasing streamers' financial contributions

Ottawa tells CRTC to change course on increasing streamers' financial contributions

Ottawa is directing the CRTC to back down on its recent decision to triple streamers' financial contributions to Canadian content, and will instead provide $600 million to the sector, Culture Minister Marc Miller said Wednesday. The decision comes after the Motion Picture Association, the U.S. group representing streamers, called on cabinet to reconsider the current approach and the U.S. ambassador...

Caucus management is a matter of survival for Liberal majority government, say observers

Caucus management is a matter of survival for Liberal majority government, say observers

Former Liberal staffer Lisa Kirbie says Steven Guilbeault's resignation and organized caucus dissent have exposed simmering progressive concerns that high polling can't keep a lid on forever.

Conservative MP says First Nations votes will be critical in Alberta referendum

Conservative MP says First Nations votes will be critical in Alberta referendum

Conservative MP Billy Morin says he will spend the summer talking to Indigenous leaders about encouraging people to vote in the Alberta referendum. Albertans are set to vote in October on whether they want to stay in Canada or prefer to hold a future binding referendum on separating from the country. Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre says he and his caucus...

51st state 'a great discussion' for Trump and Carney, says Hoekstra as president trolls ahead of trade talks

51st state 'a great discussion' for Trump and Carney, says Hoekstra as president trolls ahead of trade talks

Carney says Canada won't react or respond to every post from the U.S. president. U.S. Ambassador to Canada Pete Hoekstra said making Canada the 51st state would be "a great discussion for the president" and Prime Minister Mark Carney to have, as the White House resurrects the sensitive topic just as trade talks gear up. After backing off his annexation...

Con­ser­vat­ive MPs under pres­sure to pub­licly oppose sep­ar­a­tion - Some are being more vocal than oth­ers

Con­ser­vat­ive MPs under pres­sure to pub­licly oppose sep­ar­a­tion - Some are being more vocal than oth­ers

Some are being more vocal than oth­ers. Former Alberta fin­ance min­is­ter Travis Toews says it is import­ant for fed­eral Con­ser­vat­ives in Alberta to pub­licly state their pos­i­tion about remain­ing a part of Canada, but acknow­ledged there are “vari­ous levels of com­fort in enter­ing the debate” in the party's caucus...

To win submarine contract, South Korea’s ‘Project Beaver’ proposes manufacturing hydrogen trucks in Canada

To win submarine contract, South Korea’s ‘Project Beaver’ proposes manufacturing hydrogen trucks in Canada

The secret weapon in South Korea’s bid to win the lucrative submarine contract is code named “Project Beaver.” Facing market conditions that blocked it from bringing an electric vehicle plant to Canada, the South Koreans drafted a plan to manufacture hydrogen long-haul freight trucks and build dozens of charging stations in Canada, beginning in 2030. The proposal was submitted as...

Why Preston Manning says sticking to 'status quo' in face of Alberta separation is 'extremely unwise'

Why Preston Manning says sticking to 'status quo' in face of Alberta separation is 'extremely unwise'

'Simply building a pipeline is not the complete answer,' said Manning. On the eve of the 1995 referendum vote in Quebec, Preston Manning rose in the House of Commons to ask the Liberal government of the day how it might be willing to change to convince a “soft sovereigntist or a discontented federalist” to vote against leaving the country. Article...

Carney shrugs off Trump's latest 51st state jab as trade talks ramp up

Carney shrugs off Trump's latest 51st state jab as trade talks ramp up

PM said Canada would not react or respond to every post from the U.S. president. Prime Minister Mark Carney shrugged off U.S. president Donald Trump's latest jab about Canada being the 51st state as a post by an "exceptionally active user of social media." "It's only gone up in recent months," Carney said Tuesday of Trump's online posting. "And we're...

‘This agreement is highly beneficial’: LeBlanc wants CUSMA renewed as Trump revives 51st state threat

‘This agreement is highly beneficial’: LeBlanc wants CUSMA renewed as Trump revives 51st state threat

In a letter to his counterparts in the United States and Mexico, Canada-U.S. Trade Minister Dominic LeBlanc says he wants to renew the countries’ trilateral trade deal for another 16 years and opt out of an annual review process. “This agreement is highly beneficial to each of our countries and to the integrated North American economy,” LeBlanc wrote in a...

Canada confirms purchase of 26 HIMARS rocket launchers from U.S. government

Canada confirms purchase of 26 HIMARS rocket launchers from U.S. government

DND says decision made after 'a rigorous evaluation process.' A little over a month after the Pentagon revealed it had ordered a batch of M142 High Mobility Artillery Rocket Systems (HIMARS) for several allied countries, including Canada, the Liberal government has now publicly acknowledged the purchase. Defence Minister David McGuinty, in a statement on Tuesday, said 26 of the highly...

Chair of Carney's new faith advisory council defends its mandate and membership

Chair of Carney's new faith advisory council defends its mandate and membership

Canadian Identity Minister Marc Miller is defending the makeup and initial mandate of a faith advisory council Prime Minister Mark Carney announced on Monday, as it faces criticism from Opposition Conservatives and Jewish advocacy group B'nai Brith. "Part of this committee is to talk in a way that is open and frank and to tackle issues with a group of...

Canada reaches deal with Quebec on billions of dollars in infrastructure funding

Canada reaches deal with Quebec on billions of dollars in infrastructure funding

Prime Minister Mark Carney says the federal government has reached a new deal with Quebec to transfer billions of dollars in funding for infrastructure. Carney says the money could be used to build new hospitals and invest in public transit. He made the announcement in Longueuil, Que., near Montreal, with Quebec Premier Christine Frechette.

U.S. State Department looks to Canada to offer support as Trump eyes Cuba

U.S. State Department looks to Canada to offer support as Trump eyes Cuba

With United States President Donald Trump increasing pressure on Cuba, his country’s State Department is looking to Canada to build support for regime change in Havana. Foreign Affairs deputy minister Arun Thangaraj was at the U.S. State Department last week where he met with U.S. Deputy Secretary of State Christopher Landau. During that meeting, the topic of Cuba came up...

Newfoundland and Labrador offering millions for exploration to open new oil frontiers

Newfoundland and Labrador offering millions for exploration to open new oil frontiers

Oil production is ramping up off Newfoundland and Labrador and the government is offering money to companies interested in looking for more. Premier Tony Wakeham opened an annual energy conference in St. John's, N.L., by announcing a call for exploration bids on 16 areas off the province's east coast. He says his government will offer up to $30 million to...



US Poli

More
House passes resolution to halt military action in Iran in rebuke of Trump

House passes resolution to halt military action in Iran in rebuke of Trump

The House approved a war powers resolution Wednesday that would halt the U.S. military action against Iran, defying President Donald Trump as a handful of Republicans joined with Democrats to seek to end the three-month-long war. Opposition to the war has only grown as the conflict drags on and as Trump struggles to negotiate a quick resolution.

MAHA candidate beats Trump's choice in Republican primary for Iowa governor

MAHA candidate beats Trump's choice in Republican primary for Iowa governor

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) -- Businessman Zach Lahn's win in Iowa's Republican gubernatorial primary over President Donald Trump's pick, Rep. Randy Feenstra, delivered a rare electoral setback for Trump in a primary season that had previously handed him back-to-back victories.

Takeaways from Tuesday's primaries as Democrats try to make Iowa inroads and defend California

Takeaways from Tuesday's primaries as Democrats try to make Iowa inroads and defend California

WASHINGTON (AP) -- The contours of a premier U.S. Senate race took shape Tuesday night in Iowa, while President Donald Trump's endorsement streak ran into a roadblock there.

'Out of my lane.' Dr. Oz ducks questions during his turn in the White House briefing room

'Out of my lane.' Dr. Oz ducks questions during his turn in the White House briefing room

WASHINGTON (AP) -- He spoke fast, hammering through the Trump administration's efforts to lower prescription drug prices, combat health care fraud, and curb the spread of Ebola overseas.

International

More
U.S. State Department looks to Canada to offer support as Trump eyes Cuba

U.S. State Department looks to Canada to offer support as Trump eyes Cuba

With United States President Donald Trump increasing pressure on Cuba, his country’s State Department is looking to Canada to build support for regime change in Havana. Foreign Affairs deputy minister Arun Thangaraj was at the U.S. State Department last week where he met with U.S. Deputy Secretary of State Christopher Landau. During that meeting, the topic of Cuba came up...

Sweden’s PM jokes about Canada joining the EU, says it’s a ‘very welcoming club’

Sweden’s PM jokes about Canada joining the EU, says it’s a ‘very welcoming club’

Swedish Prime Minister Ulf Kristersson joked there may be a place for Canada in the European Union to join “like-minded” nations as “the most Nordic country in the world outside the Nordics.” “European Union is obviously a matter of geography, you can hear that from the name,” Kristersson told CTV Question Period host Vassy Kapelos when asked for his opinion...

U.S. blockage on Strait of Hormuz ‘will now be lifted,’ says Trump

U.S. blockage on Strait of Hormuz ‘will now be lifted,’ says Trump

U.S. President Donald Trump says the U.S. blockade on ships travelling through the Strait of Hormuz “will now be lifted.” “Ships caught in the Strait due to our amazing and unprecedented Naval Blockade, which will now be lifted, may start the process of ‘heading home!’ Say HELLO to your wives, husbands, parents, and families from me, your favorite President!” reads...

China's foreign minister Wang Yi set to meet Carney, Anand today

China's foreign minister Wang Yi set to meet Carney, Anand today

China's foreign minister Wang Yi is in Ottawa today, the first such visit in a decade. He is in Canada for a three-day trip that will include meetings with Foreign Affairs Minister Anita Anand and Prime Minister Mark Carney. The prime minister visited China in January and met with President Xi Jinping.

‘Worth repeating’: U.S. ambassador welcomes PM Carney’s offer to ‘help make America great again’

‘Worth repeating’: U.S. ambassador welcomes PM Carney’s offer to ‘help make America great again’

Employing U.S. President Donald Trump’s marquee slogan, Prime Minister Mark Carney told a New York City business crowd on Thursday that “Canada strong will help make America great again,” a remark the U.S. envoy to this country said was “worth repeating.” Speaking at the Economic Club of New York, the prime minister detailed his economic diversification strategy, and his plans...

Think Tank

More
Government control of child care continues to hurt Ontario families
TCI QuickTake: Canada’s Goods Exposure to China May Be Significantly Larger Than its Export Data Suggest

TCI QuickTake: Canada’s Goods Exposure to China May Be Significantly Larger Than its Export Data Suggest

Chinese import-side mirror data, which capture how China records imports from Canada, point to a larger Canadian-origin goods footprint — and a more complex bilateral trade relationship than headline export figures imply.

The Hard Choices of Canada’s China Reset

The Hard Choices of Canada’s China Reset

Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi’s visit to Canada this week is significant. It is the first bilateral visit to Canada by a Chinese foreign minister since June 2016, and the most visible sign yet that the thaw in Canada-China relations that began with Prime Minister Mark Carney’s January visit to Beijing is moving into a more consequential implementation phase. If...


Substacks

More

A collection of SubStack publishing within Canadian public affairs.

The Opposable Prime Minister

The Opposable Prime Minister

In 2007, Roger Martin, then dean of the Rotman School of Management at University of Toronto, wrote a book called The Opposable Mind. It argued that the most successful leaders tend to be “integrative thinkers,” by which he meant they tackled problems holistically rather than breaking them down into component parts. Instead of seeking trade-offs, they are at ease with...

Can the Ottawa Treaty banning landmines survive?

Can the Ottawa Treaty banning landmines survive?

“Despite the ongoing conflict between Hezbollah and Israel which has resulted in thousands of deaths and injuries…Lebanon moved forward with the ban on antipersonnel landmines,” said the Ottawa-based group Mines Action Canada in a statement, celebrating the new addition.

Protecting a pedophile's privacy

Protecting a pedophile's privacy

Canada’s privacy laws are supposed to protect ordinary citizens from unwarranted intrusions into their personal lives. But they can also protect pedophiles. Dead pedophiles. Dead pedophiles from America.

Podcasts

Section Sponsor

Recession obsession | Plus, an insider’s guide to Ottawa

Recession obsession | Plus, an insider’s guide to Ottawa

The recession debate has taken over Parliament Hill, and Pierre Poilievre wants Mark Carney to wear it. Nick Taylor-Vaisey and Mickey Djuric dissect the fight over the exact meaning of two quarters of negative growth. The Liberals move to reverse a rule forcing US streaming giants to fund Canadian content, one day after Dominic LeBlanc met Trump's trade rep in...

The Exit Interview: Steven Guilbeault

The Exit Interview: Steven Guilbeault

Greetings, you curiouser and curiouser Herle Burly-ites! There was a resignation in Ottawa last week that struck a louder chord than most. High profile Liberal caucus member, and former Cabinet Minister, Steven Guilbeault announced will be leaving politics over the summer. Best known for his time as Minister of Environment and Climate Change, Mr. Guilbeault has been nothing if not...

Can Canada avoid a deepening recession?

Can Canada avoid a deepening recession?

Canada has entered a “technical recession,” leading to fingerpointing in the House of Commons and Donald Trump renewing his calls to make Canada the 51st state. Many economists are disputing that this is a recession at all. But whatever you call it, the economy is weak right now. It was weak before the trade war and it’s been made weaker...

Reporter's Notebook -- Raj and Russo on Canada/Us and Much More

Reporter's Notebook -- Raj and Russo on Canada/Us and Much More

Althia Raj and Rob Russo share what they're hearing on everything from Dominic LeBlanc's visit to Washington and what it says about Canada's latest stance on the relationship with the United States; Stephen Harper; AI; and what's happening inside the Liberal caucus and what that could mean for the NDP.